Shiba Inu’s development team has taken a decisive step toward reinforcing Shibarium’s technical structure following a security incident in September, according to a recent report from Bitget.
The community’s information channel confirmed that a network migration is now in motion, focusing on the RPC (Remote Procedure Call) system, a crucial component enabling communication between users, decentralized applications, and the blockchain itself.
On October 31, Shibarium’s official channel revealed that the legacy RPC endpoint would be disabled within two weeks. This shift requires all users and developers to update their network configurations to a new access point.
The update represents a complete migration to a safer and more decentralized network layer, aimed at improving communication stability and reducing system vulnerabilities.
The Bitget report highlighted that this upgrade marks a technical evolution rather than a routine patch. By decentralizing the RPC layer, Shiba Inu aims to eliminate single points of failure, enhance performance, and prepare the network for future scalability challenges.
The hardening of the Shibarium network’s infrastructure comes after the September attack, which caused the team to momentarily stop the network’s operation. Unlike most attacks involving the exploitation of a protocol, the bug was due to an operational gap related to the validators’ permission levels.
An attacker capitalized on the delegation of 4.6 million BONE tokens with the intent of network-level manipulation. However, the event was neither an assault on the Shibarium protocol itself but the misuse of validation privileges, which highlighted vulnerabilities presented in the network governance structure.
After the event, the Shiba Inu team went on to implement various security upgrades. The Plasma Bridge, connecting Ethereum to Shibarium, was reopened with some restrictions, in addition to the implementation of the blacklist feature to prevent malicious addresses.
Furthermore, the seven-day cashout period was introduced to improve the security of the funds, making their retrieval safer from the possible risks of exploitation.
Such developments in the infrastructure represent the long-term plans being laid out for the future of the Shiba Inu network, with a focus on having a resilient and decentralized network. The moves made by the team demonstrate their commitment to keeping the network operational while working on gaining the confidence of the developer community.
However, the market outlook is still tentative. The price of SHIB went down by 15.9% in October, canceling out the initial monthly gain due to the susceptibility of the markets to volatility, especially due to the event of possible security breaches.
Despite the downward trend, the community on the network perceives the reforms taking place in the network’s structure as necessary for future stability.
With the RPC migration soon to be completed, the novel framework developed by Shibarium could be the precursor to greater stability, scalability, and even dominance within the saturated layer 2 scalability solutions market.
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